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Transcript
N. Gregory Mankiw
Macroeconomics
Sixth Edition
Chapter 11:
Aggregate Demand II:
Applying the IS-LM Model
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
Econ 4020/Chatterjee
slide 0
Context
 Chapter 9 introduced the model of aggregate
demand and supply.
 Chapter 10 developed the IS-LM model,
the basis of the aggregate demand curve.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 1
In this chapter, you will learn…
 how to use the IS-LM model to analyze the effects
of shocks, fiscal policy, and monetary policy
 how to derive the aggregate demand curve from
the IS-LM model
 several theories about what caused the
Great Depression
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 2
Equilibrium in the IS -LM model
The IS curve represents
equilibrium in the goods
market.
r
LM
Y  C (Y  T )  I (r )  G
The LM curve represents
money market equilibrium.
r1
M P  L (r ,Y )
Y1
The intersection determines
the unique combination of Y and r
that satisfies equilibrium in both markets.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
IS
Y
slide 3
Policy analysis with the IS -LM model
Y  C (Y  T )  I (r )  G
r
LM
M P  L (r ,Y )
We can use the IS-LM
model to analyze the
effects of
r1
• fiscal policy: G and/or T
• monetary policy: M
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
IS
Y1
Y
slide 4
An increase in government purchases
1. IS curve shifts right
1
by
G
1 MPC
causing output &
income to rise.
2. This raises money
demand, causing the
interest rate to rise…
r
2.
r2
r1
3. …which reduces investment,
so the final increase in Y
1
is smaller than
G
1 MPC
CHAPTER 11
LM
Aggregate Demand II
IS2
1.
IS1
Y1 Y2
Y
3.
slide 5
A tax cut
Consumers save
r
(1MPC) of the tax cut,
so the initial boost in
spending is smaller for T
r2
than for an equal G…
2.
r1
and the IS curve shifts by
1.
LM
1.
MPC
T
1 MPC
2. …so the effects on r
and Y are smaller for T
than for an equal G.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
IS2
IS1
Y1 Y2
Y
2.
slide 6
Monetary policy: An increase in M
1. M > 0 shifts
the LM curve down
(or to the right)
2. …causing the
interest rate to fall
r
LM2
r1
r2
3. …which increases
investment, causing
output & income to
rise.
CHAPTER 11
LM1
Aggregate Demand II
IS
Y1 Y2
Y
slide 7
Interaction between
monetary & fiscal policy
 Model:
Monetary & fiscal policy variables
(M, G, and T ) are exogenous.
 Real world:
Monetary policymakers may adjust M
in response to changes in fiscal policy,
or vice versa.
 Such interaction may alter the impact of the
original policy change.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 8
The Fed’s response to G > 0
 Suppose Congress increases G.
 Possible Fed responses:
1. hold M constant
2. hold r constant
3. hold Y constant
 In each case, the effects of the G
are different:
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 9
Response 1: Hold M constant
If Congress raises G,
the IS curve shifts right.
r
If Fed holds M constant,
then LM curve doesn’t
shift.
r2
r1
LM1
IS2
IS1
Results:
Y  Y 2  Y1
r  r2  r1
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
Y1 Y2
Y
slide 10
Response 2: Hold r constant
If Congress raises G,
the IS curve shifts right.
To keep r constant,
Fed increases M
to shift LM curve right.
r
LM1
LM2
r2
r1
IS2
IS1
Results:
Y  Y 3  Y1
Y1 Y2 Y3
Y
r  0
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 11
Response 3: Hold Y constant
If Congress raises G,
the IS curve shifts right.
To keep Y constant,
Fed reduces M
to shift LM curve left.
LM2
LM1
r
r3
r2
r1
IS2
IS1
Results:
Y  0
Y1 Y2
Y
r  r3  r1
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 12
Estimates of fiscal policy multipliers
from the DRI macroeconometric model
Assumption about
monetary policy
Estimated
value of
Y / G
Estimated
value of
Y / T
Fed holds money
supply constant
0.60
0.26
Fed holds nominal
interest rate constant
1.93
1.19
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 13
Shocks in the IS -LM model
IS shocks: exogenous changes in the
demand for goods & services.
Examples:
 stock market boom or crash
 change in households’ wealth
 C
 change in business or consumer
confidence or expectations
 I and/or C
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 14
Shocks in the IS -LM model
LM shocks: exogenous changes in the
demand for money.
Examples:
 a wave of credit card fraud increases
demand for money.
 more ATMs or the Internet reduce money
demand.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 15
CASE STUDY:
The U.S. recession of 2001
 During 2001,
 2.1 million people lost their jobs,
as unemployment rose from 3.9% to 5.8%.
 GDP growth slowed to 0.8%
(compared to 3.9% average annual growth
during 1994-2000).
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 17
CASE STUDY:
The U.S. recession of 2001
Index (1942 = 100)
 Causes: 1) Stock market decline  C
1500
1200
Standard & Poor’s
500
900
600
300
1995
CHAPTER 11
1996
1997
1998
Aggregate Demand II
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
slide 18
CASE STUDY:
The U.S. recession of 2001
 Causes: 2) 9/11
 increased uncertainty
 fall in consumer & business confidence
 result: lower spending, IS curve shifted left
 Causes: 3) Corporate accounting scandals
 Enron, WorldCom, etc.
 reduced stock prices, discouraged investment
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 19
CASE STUDY:
The U.S. recession of 2001
 Fiscal policy response: shifted IS curve right
 tax cuts in 2001 and 2003
 spending increases
 airline industry bailout
 NYC reconstruction
 Afghanistan war
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 20
CASE STUDY:
The U.S. recession of 2001
 Monetary policy response: shifted LM curve right
7
Three-month
T-Bill Rate
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 21
What is the Fed’s policy instrument?
 The news media commonly report the Fed’s policy
changes as interest rate changes, as if the Fed
has direct control over market interest rates.
 In fact, the Fed targets the federal funds rate –
the interest rate banks charge one another on
overnight loans.
 The Fed changes the money supply and shifts the
LM curve to achieve its target.
 Other short-term rates typically move with the
federal funds rate.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 22
IS-LM and aggregate demand
 So far, we’ve been using the IS-LM model to
analyze the short run, when the price level is
assumed fixed.
 However, a change in P would
shift LM and therefore affect Y.
 The aggregate demand curve
(introduced in Chap. 9) captures this
relationship between P and Y.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 24
Deriving the AD curve
r
Intuition for slope
of AD curve:
P  (M/P )
 LM shifts left
 r
 I
 Y
LM(P2)
LM(P1)
r2
r1
IS
P
Y2
Y
P2
P1
AD
Y2
CHAPTER 11
Y1
Aggregate Demand II
Y1
Y
slide 25
Monetary policy and the AD curve
The Fed can increase
aggregate demand:
M  LM shifts right
r
LM(M1/P1)
LM(M2/P1)
r1
r2
IS
 r
 I
P
 Y at each
value of P
P1
Y1
Y1
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
Y2
Y2
Y
AD2
AD1
Y
slide 26
Fiscal policy and the AD curve
Expansionary fiscal
policy (G and/or T )
increases agg. demand:
r
LM
r2
r1
IS2
T  C
IS1
 IS shifts right
P
Y1
Y2
Y
 Y at each
value
P1
of P
Y1
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
Y2
AD2
AD1
Y
slide 27
IS-LM and AD-AS
in the short run & long run
Recall from Chapter 9: The force that moves the
economy from the short run to the long run
is the gradual adjustment of prices.
In the short-run
equilibrium, if
CHAPTER 11
then over time, the
price level will
Y Y
rise
Y Y
fall
Y Y
remain constant
Aggregate Demand II
slide 28
The SR and LR effects of an IS shock
r
A negative IS shock
shifts IS and AD left,
causing Y to fall.
LRAS LM(P )
1
IS2
Y
P
SRAS1
Y
Aggregate Demand II
Y
LRAS
P1
CHAPTER 11
IS1
AD1
AD2
Y
slide 29
The SR and LR effects of an IS shock
r
LRAS LM(P )
1
In the new short-run
equilibrium, Y  Y
IS2
Y
P
SRAS1
Y
Aggregate Demand II
Y
LRAS
P1
CHAPTER 11
IS1
AD1
AD2
Y
slide 30
The SR and LR effects of an IS shock
r
LRAS LM(P )
1
In the new short-run
equilibrium, Y  Y
IS2
Over time, P gradually
falls, which causes
• SRAS to move down.
• M/P to increase,
Y
P
P1
SRAS1
Y
Aggregate Demand II
Y
LRAS
which causes LM
to move down.
CHAPTER 11
IS1
AD1
AD2
Y
slide 31
The SR and LR effects of an IS shock
r
LRAS LM(P )
1
LM(P2)
IS2
Over time, P gradually
falls, which causes
• SRAS to move down.
• M/P to increase,
Y
P
Y
LRAS
P1
SRAS1
P2
SRAS2
which causes LM
to move down.
Y
CHAPTER 11
IS1
Aggregate Demand II
AD1
AD2
Y
slide 32
The SR and LR effects of an IS shock
r
LRAS LM(P )
1
LM(P2)
This process continues
until economy reaches a
long-run equilibrium with
Y Y
IS2
Y
P
Y
LRAS
P1
SRAS1
P2
SRAS2
Y
CHAPTER 11
IS1
Aggregate Demand II
AD1
AD2
Y
slide 33
The Great Depression
30
Unemployment
(right scale)
220
25
200
20
180
15
160
10
Real GNP
(left scale)
140
120
1929
CHAPTER 11
5
percent of labor force
billions of 1958 dollars
240
0
1931
1933
1935
Aggregate Demand II
1937
1939
slide 35
THE SPENDING HYPOTHESIS:
Shocks to the IS curve
 asserts that the Depression was largely due to
an exogenous fall in the demand for goods &
services – a leftward shift of the IS curve.
 evidence:
output and interest rates both fell, which is what
a leftward IS shift would cause.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 36
THE SPENDING HYPOTHESIS:
Reasons for the IS shift
 Stock market crash  exogenous C
 Oct-Dec 1929: S&P 500 fell 17%
 Oct 1929-Dec 1933: S&P 500 fell 71%
 Drop in investment
 “correction” after overbuilding in the 1920s
 widespread bank failures made it harder to obtain
financing for investment
 Contractionary fiscal policy
 Politicians raised tax rates and cut spending to
combat increasing deficits.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 37
THE MONEY HYPOTHESIS:
A shock to the LM curve
 asserts that the Depression was largely due to
huge fall in the money supply.
 evidence:
M1 fell 25% during 1929-33.
 But, two problems with this hypothesis:
 P fell even more, so M/P actually rose slightly
during 1929-31.
 nominal interest rates fell, which is the opposite
of what a leftward LM shift would cause.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 38
THE MONEY HYPOTHESIS AGAIN:
The effects of falling prices
 asserts that the severity of the Depression was
due to a huge deflation:
P fell 25% during 1929-33.
 This deflation was probably caused by the fall in
M, so perhaps money played an important role
after all.
 In what ways does a deflation affect the
economy?
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 39
THE MONEY HYPOTHESIS AGAIN:
The effects of falling prices
 The stabilizing effects of deflation:
 P  (M/P )  LM shifts right  Y
 Pigou effect:
P
 (M/P )
 consumers’ wealth 
 C
 IS shifts right
 Y
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 40
THE MONEY HYPOTHESIS AGAIN:
The effects of falling prices
 The destabilizing effects of expected deflation:
 e




r  for each value of i
I  because I = I (r )
planned expenditure & agg. demand 
income & output 
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 41
THE MONEY HYPOTHESIS AGAIN:
The effects of falling prices
 The destabilizing effects of unexpected deflation:
debt-deflation theory
P (if unexpected)
 transfers purchasing power from borrowers to
lenders
 borrowers spend less,
lenders spend more
 if borrowers’ propensity to spend is larger than
lenders’, then aggregate spending falls,
the IS curve shifts left, and Y falls
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 42
Why another Depression is
unlikely
 Policymakers (or their advisors) now know
much more about macroeconomics:
 The Fed knows better than to let M fall
so much, especially during a contraction.
 Fiscal policymakers know better than to raise
taxes or cut spending during a contraction.
 Federal deposit insurance makes widespread
bank failures very unlikely.
 Automatic stabilizers make fiscal policy
expansionary during an economic downturn.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 43
Chapter Summary
1. IS-LM model
 a theory of aggregate demand
 exogenous: M, G, T,
P exogenous in short run, Y in long run
 endogenous: r,
Y endogenous in short run, P in long run
 IS curve: goods market equilibrium
 LM curve: money market equilibrium
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 44
Chapter Summary
2. AD curve
 shows relation between P and the IS-LM model’s
equilibrium Y.
 negative slope because
P  (M/P )  r  I  Y
 expansionary fiscal policy shifts IS curve right,
raises income, and shifts AD curve right.
 expansionary monetary policy shifts LM curve right,
raises income, and shifts AD curve right.
 IS or LM shocks shift the AD curve.
CHAPTER 11
Aggregate Demand II
slide 45